Monza Magic | Explore Italy's famous F1 circuit
La Pista Magica. Tom Clarkson explores the historic banking at the Autodromo Nazionale Monza circuit.
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Monza Italy (1956)
Monza, Italy.
SV. Towards and pan, the start of the Monza Grand Prix of Europe 1956 race and camera pan track view of cars going away. TV. Group of cars coming out of bend, picture shows adjoining road. LV. Towards, cars racing. LV. Car seems to have met with a mishap way down the track, there is a cloud of smoke and a car is run to the side of the road. LV. Shot through trees, car racing one of which is Stirling Moss. LV. Through trees, another car racing by, cannot see number. These two scenes show cars racing on a bank track. GV. Car coming under road above it like a bridge as one passed overhead. LV. Towards and past, car number 18, Harry Schell Vanwell clearly seen, followed by others into a bend. TV. Towards, car racing past and a banked track. LV. Car coming towards on banked track, camera pans down as the car goes past. LV.Car races away in distance on banked track followed by another. LV. Towards, car racing on two roads. This is a fork - one goes to our left and the other to our right. LV. Pan with car No 36, Stirling Moss. SV. Pan as two cars come along. One is No 22, Fangio. LV. Towards, car coming into finish, flag goes down. SV. Car No 36. with Moss in it and mechanic cuddling and kissing him. AS. Crowds in the stands. SV. Moss surrounded by people and photographers, & SV. A man in the crowd puts out hands and shakes hands with Moss. Peter Collins gives his car to Fangio so he can finish the race and keep his champion position.
(F.G.) (Orig L)
FILM ID:597.15
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British Pathé also represents the Reuters historical collection, which includes more than 136,000 items from the news agencies Gaumont Graphic (1910-1932), Empire News Bulletin (1926-1930), British Paramount (1931-1957), and Gaumont British (1934-1959), as well as Visnews content from 1957 to the end of 1984. All footage can be viewed on the British Pathé website.
Italian GP track guide (and a Monza history lesson)
Peter Windsor talks you around a lap of Monza, and recalls some famous moments in the circuit's history, which dates back almost 100 years, with the help of some fascinating pictures from our photographic archive.
Monza Oval - A lap with the bicycle on the old Monza Banking
Monza Oval, a lap with the bicycle on the old Monza Banking.
One of the most iconic race tracks of the past is the old Monza banking. Actually, there was another banking before WWII. It opened in 1922 and was demolished in 1938.
After the WWII, Autodromo Nazionale di Monza was a road circuit only. But in the 50's they want to return to it's original concept, a combination of a road circuit and a high banked oval.
In 1955 a new oval was introduced. To bring the full Monza circuit at exact 10 Km, the Parabolica Corner was built. The oval was used untill 1969. Because it was found to dangerous they only used the road circuit.
The old Monza banking felt in decay over the folling years. There were even plans to demolish the old oval in the 90's. But after massive protests of fans and Formula 1 drivers they decided to keep the banking.
Today the old Monza Oval is used once a year for the Monza Rally. The rest of the year it's a curiousity for motorsport fans all over the world.
In 2017 I went for a lap on the oval. With a rented bicycle I explored the lost circuit, together wit Yuri Bruschi, from wich is the footage on the end card.
More about the history of the Monza Oval on my website
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1966 MGM Grand Prix Autodromo Nazionale Monza Racing Sequences
F1 Racing sequences shot at the Autodromo Nazionale Monza - with real sound - from the 1966 MGM movie Grand Prix starring James Garner
Classic & Historic Race Cars in action on the old Monza High Speed Oval & Banking!
The Modena Cento Ore is a five-day tour across Italy along scenic routes with circuit races, hillclimbs on closed roads and time trials for cars from the 1920 to 1981 period (more or less). The 2018 started at Monza Circuit with the first scheduled race on the GP track and followed by a timed special stage that included a passage on the old Monza's oval layout.
Of course cars aren't no longer allowed to drive on the top of the high speed banking both for safety reasons in case of crash and by how foundations have deteriorated over the years (the lower part of the structure, where cars are racing in this video, is fully planted on the ground so still very solid and safer).
Hope you like it!
List of the cars in the video:
Ferrari 308 GTB Gr.4 Michelotto
Maserati 250S
Ferrari 250 GT Berlinetta SWB
Ferrari 365 GTB/4 Daytona Competizione
Porsche 911 S Gr.4
Ford GT40 MK1
Shelby Cobra Daytona Coupè
Alfa Romeo Giulia Sprint
Porsche 911 SC Gr. 4
BMW 328 Roadster
Mercedes Benz 300 SL Gullwing
Porsche 904 Carrera GTS
Lotus Elan 26R
Porsche 356
Lancia 037 Stradale
Jaguar C-Type
Ferrari 250 GT SWB Sefac
Lancia Stratos HF Gr. 4
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
I have to thank my friend and youtuber Italiansupercarvideo ( for letting me use his shots taken during the event. Don't forget to subscribe to his channel!!
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- Camcorder: Canon Legria HF G40 + Canon DM-100 Microphone
- Event: Modena 100 Ore 2018
- Where: Autodromo di Monza, Italy
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Monza - Oval (1966)
Monzapolis. Racing on Monza oval track.
Video probably from the movie Grand Prix 1966.
Monza Oval (Banking) Bicycle Tour - Urban Exploring at Autodromo Nazionale di Monza
A bicycle tour around the high banked Monza Oval by Herman Liesemeijer and Yuri Alessandro Bruschi.
In the summer of 2017 we explored the Autodromo Nazionale di Monza. For me, Herman, it was the second visit. Yuri came here already since the 70's a few times a year. He knows the track very well and showed me the old banking.
The footage was shot with 3 different cameras. We both had a GoPro action cam, and I filmed also with the handycam.
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Monza - since 1922, the circuit of circuits
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+1 on Google+: Peter Windsor talks through our 3D animation of the Monza lap. The technical highlights are several; the history and the passion more so
Photos: Motorsport Images
Exploring Classic Monza
Italian GP from 1966 in modern & old F1 Cars!
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Monza Cathedral, Monza Brianza, Lombardy, Italy, Europe
The Duomo of Monza often known in English as Monza Cathedral is the main religious building of Monza, near Milan, in northern Italy. Unlike most duomos it is not in fact a cathedral, as Monza has always been part of the Diocese of Milan, but is in the charge of an archpriest who has the right to certain episcopal vestments including the mitre and the ring. The church is also known as the Basilica of San Giovanni Battista from its dedication to John the Baptist. The church has a nave and two aisles, separated by octagonal columns with Romanesque capitals and round columns with Baroque capitals. It ends in large apses, and has a series of chapels opening into the aisles. The wall decoration is overwhelmingly Baroque. Other artworks include a choir by Matteo da Campione, the high altar by Andrea Appiani, and the presbytery and transept frescoes by Giuseppe Meda and Giuseppe Arcimboldi. In the right transept is the entrance to the Serpero Museum which houses the treasury with the Iron Crown of Lombardy, and the Late Antique ivory Poet and Muse diptych, of about 500, as well as an internationally important collection of late antique and early medieval works of various kinds, many deposited by Theodelinda herself. These includes small metal 6th century ampullae from the Holy Land which are evidence of the emerging iconography of medieval art, among them the earliest depictions of the treatments of the Crucifixion and Nativity of Jesus in art that were to become standard throughout the Middle Ages and beyond. Only Bobbio has an equivalent collection of ampullae. The library holds a number of old and important illuminated manuscripts. The massive west front is divided into five parts by six lisene (applied strips), each of which is surmounted by a tabernacle housing a statue. The façade has several mullioned windows with, in the centre, a large rose window framed by a motif inspired by Roman antique ceilings, decorated with rosettes, masks and star motifs. The façade is considered Romanesque in its structure and Gothic in its decoration[citation needed]. Typical of the latter is the porch, with 14th century gargoyles on the sides and the 13th century lunette with the 16th century busts of Theodelinda and King Agilulf. Over the porch is the statue of Saint John the Baptist (15th century). Over the portal is depicted the Baptism of Jesus, assisted by Saint Peter, the Blessed Virgin Mary, Saint Zachary and Saint Paul. In the upper section is portrayed Theodelinda offering to John the Baptist the Iron Crown of Lombardy, together with her kneeling husband Agilulf and their children Adaloald and Gundeberga. Apart the Iron Crown, the most famous attraction of the church is the Chapel of Theodelinda. It has 15th-century frescoes from the Zavattari workshop depicting the stories of the queen's life, such as the dove episode, her marriage proposal, her meeting with her first husband, Authari, the latter's death in battle, and her new marriage with Agilulf. All the figures are portrayed with rich garments typical of the Visconti era. The vault is decorated with 14th century figures of saints and evangelists enthroned. On the outer arch are depicted Theodelinda with her court venerating Saint John the Baptist. An ancient and unusual privilege of the Duomo is its right to employ ceremonial armed guards, rather on the line of the Papal Swiss Guard at the Vatican. Known as Alabardieri from the halberds they carry, the date of their institution is described in a 1763 edict of Maria Theresa of Austria as 'immemorial'. Their eighteenth-century style uniform, of blue wool with gold braiding and a belt buckle with an image of the Iron Crown, is unchanged from that approved in the edict, except that since the Napoleonic period the bicorne hat has replaced the earlier tricorne. The basilica, which would in essence have been complete by 603 when heir to the Lombard throne Adaloald was baptised here by Secundus of Non, is believed to have been commissioned towards the end of the seventh century by the Lombard Queen of Italy, Theodelinda, as a royal chapel to serve the nearby palace. According to the legend she had made a vow to build a church dedicated to Saint John the Baptist, and when riding along the banks of the Lambro River, she was halted by a dove who told her Modo (Latin for now), to which she replied Etiam (yes). Monza itself was initially known as Modoetia. In 595, she had a oraculum (chapel) built on the Greek Cross plan; of this chapel only the walls exist today. The queen was buried here, in what is now the central left aisle of the church. On the remains of the oraculum, a new church was erected in the 13th century. It was again rebuilt as a basilica, starting from 1300, on a Latin Cross plan with an octagonal tiburium. In the late 14th century, the side chapels were added and, as designed by Matteo da Campione, the Pisan-Gothic style west front in white and green marble was begun.
What If Modern F1 Cars Raced At Historic Monza?
It wouldn't end well is what...
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Monza Magic: 1962 Italian GP
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+1 on Google+: More Monza Mood as we relive the 1962 Italian GP. It's a year after the Von Trips tragedy and the banking (even though it played no part in the accident) lies dormant. Jim Clark and John Surtees have just won the preceding races but BRM's Graham Hill is hoping to bounce back on this power circuit. Courtesy of Movietone News, this short clip is aired for the first time since 1962. It features a contemporary voiceover.
Monza Italy
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Assetto Corsa - Formula 1 2009 MOD - Old Monza RACE 2k 60FPS
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Live At The Bank - Monza
The Bank - Monza - Settembre 2018
Portrait - The Bank Monza 16 Marzo 2018
Monza Oval Circuit in 1957 - onboard view
This is a video of the 1957 Monza Oval circuit - not used anymore! Originally, the video had no sound so I used some jazz.
Music: indigo jam unit Roots
Monza Florio Circuit by Bicycle - Onride POV
Monza Florio Circuit by Bicycle - Onride POV
In this video I show you a part of the Monza Florio Circuit, which was used from 1931 to 1938. The Florio Circuit was 6.68 km long, which is 4.15 Miles.
We’re started at the current Ascari Chicane and are now on the original Central Straight, which was in use from the opening in 1922 to 1938. After renovation works in 1938, it was replaced by the current Central Straight, wich is on our right hand. Today the old Central Straight is a road inside the oval.
The original Monza Circuit opened in 1922, after a construction time of only 100 days. After Brooklands in 1907, and Indianapolis in 1909, the Monza Circuit was the third purpose-built race track in the world.
The full Monza circuit was exactly 10 kilometers long, which is 6.2 miles. The track included a road circuit and a high banked oval, that could be used separately or combined.
The first changes to the track came after a fatal accident in 1928. During that year’s Italian Grand Prix the Italian driver Emilio Materassi crashed during an attempt to catch up to Giulio Foresti’s Bugatti on the main straight.
Materassi’s Talbot plunged into the nearby spectators. Both Emilio Materassi and more than 20 spectators died. However it was not on the oval, it lead to the closure of the oval section, to reduce the high speeds on the main straight.
In 1930 Vincenzo Florio, president of the Automobile Sports Commission, came up with the idea for a new layout, using the existing infrastructure of the circuit. A short straight and two rectangular corners connected the central straight and the oval. In this version only the Southern banking was used. This layout was called the Florio Circuit.
Now we enter the Southern Banking. Actually, this is not the original banking used in the Florio Circuit. The old banking was demolished during the 1938 renovation works.
This banking is from 1955, when Monza want to return to the combination of a road circuit and a high speed oval. Since 1970, the oval is no longer part of the Monza Circuit. It was found too dangerous and was left abandoned.
However, since 1978, the oval is used once a year for the Monza Rally, which use only the lower part of the banking. The rest of the year it’s a reminder of a bygone era.
See also my other Monza videos:
Special thanks:
- The footage in this video was filmed by Yuri Bruschi. Visit also his channel:
- The voice over was done by Simon Smith.
Thanks for watching this video.
Don't miss our new videos and subscribe to my channel. Thanks for the subscribe :)
Places to see in ( Monza - Italy ) Duomo di Monza
Places to see in ( Monza - Italy ) Duomo di Monza
The Duomo of Monza often known in English as Monza Cathedral is the main religious building of Monza, near Milan, in northern Italy. Unlike most duomos it is not in fact a cathedral, as Monza has always been part of the Diocese of Milan, but is in the charge of an archpriest who has the right to certain episcopal vestments including the mitre and the ring. The church is also known as the Basilica of San Giovanni Battista from its dedication to John the Baptist.
The basilica, which would in essence have been complete by 603 when heir to the Lombard throne Adaloald was baptised here by Secundus of Non, is believed to have been commissioned towards the end of the sixth century by the Lombard Queen of Italy, Theodelinda, as a royal chapel to serve the nearby palace. According to the legend she had made a vow to build a church dedicated to Saint John the Baptist, and when riding along the banks of the Lambro River, she was halted by a dove who told her Modo (Latin for now), to which she replied Etiam (yes). Monza itself was initially known as Modoetia.
In 595, she had a oraculum (chapel) built on the Greek Cross plan; of this chapel only the walls exist today. The queen was buried here, in what is now the central left aisle of the church. On the remains of the oraculum, a new church was erected in the 13th century. It was again rebuilt as a basilica, starting from 1300, on a Latin Cross plan with an octagonal tiburium. In the late 14th century, the side chapels were added and, as designed by Matteo da Campione, the Pisan-Gothic style west front in white and green marble was begun. Starting from the 16th century, the choir and the ceiling were restored. Subsequently, the walls and the vaults were decorated with frescoes and stucco-work. The bell tower was erected in 1606. In the 18th century a cemetery was annexed on the left side.
The massive west front is divided into five parts by six lesene (applied strips), each of which is surmounted by a tabernacle housing a statue. The façade has several mullioned windows with, in the centre, a large rose window framed by a motif inspired by Roman antique ceilings, decorated with rosettes, masks and star motifs. The church has a nave and two aisles, separated by octagonal columns with Romanesque capitals and round columns with Baroque capitals. It ends in large apses, and has a series of chapels opening into the aisles. The wall decoration is overwhelmingly Baroque. Other artworks include a choir by Matteo da Campione, the high altar by Andrea Appiani, and the presbytery and transept frescoes by Giuseppe Meda and Giuseppe Arcimboldi.
In the right transept is the entrance to the Serpero Museum which houses the treasury with the Iron Crown of Lombardy, and the Late Antique ivory Poet and Muse diptych, of about 500, as well as an internationally important collection of late antique and early medieval works of various kinds, many deposited by Theodelinda herself. These include small metal 6th century ampullae from the Holy Land which are evidence of the emerging iconography of medieval art, among them the earliest depictions of the treatments of the Crucifixion and Nativity of Jesus in art that were to become standard throughout the Middle Ages and beyond.
Apart the Iron Crown, the most famous attraction of the church is the Chapel of Theodelinda. It has 15th-century frescoes from the Zavattari workshop depicting the stories of the queen's life, such as the dove episode, her marriage proposal, her meeting with her first husband, Authari, the latter's death in battle, and her new marriage with Agilulf. All the figures are portrayed with rich garments typical of the Visconti era.
An ancient and unusual privilege of the Duomo is its right to employ ceremonial armed guards, rather on the line of the Papal Swiss Guard at the Vatican. Known as Alabardieri from the halberds they carry, the date of their institution is described in a 1763 edict of Maria Theresa of Austria as ‘immemorial’. Their eighteenth-century style uniform, of blue wool with gold braiding and a belt buckle with an image of the Iron Crown, is unchanged from that approved in the edict, except that since the Napoleonic period the bicorne hat has replaced the earlier tricorne.
( Monza - Italy ) is well know as a tourist destination because of the variety of places you can enjoy while you are visiting Monza . Through a series of videos we will try to show you recommended places to visit in Monza - Italy
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